The Teachings of Camp

It was just like any other dreary January day in 2007: an ominous sky, snow and dirt lining the roads, a brisk breeze. I have found that when every day of the month is a repetition of this gloomy weather, all the days seem to mesh together, and I can’t remember one from another. On one gray day that month, my Mom informed me that she had signed me up for sleep away camp that summer. I was handed a brochure for YMCA Camp Nellie Huckins, an all-girls camp on Lake Ossipee in Freedom, New Hampshire. Skimming through it and only really looking at the pictures, all of which were of girls wearing eccentric outfits, the frown on my face became more and more prominent. “These girls are all freaks and weirdos,” I yelled as I stormed down the stairs into the basement and then into the office where I fed the brochure to our paper shredder. My Mom shouted to me as I ran back up the stairs and to my bedroom that I was only on the waiting list, but I couldn’t hear her over the sound of my sobs and the slam of the door. It was nothing like any other dreary January day.

In May of that year, I got a green letter in the mail informing me that I had gotten in to camp off the waiting list. As you may have guessed, that went in the paper shredder as well. The whole family came along for the hour and fifteen minute ride to Freedom on August 4th, the day after my ninth birthday. It was the last place I wanted to be.

On the second day, one of my counselors, Nicole, sat me down on her bed and asked, “What’s all this talk about you hating camp?” I had a preconceived opinion about camp before I had even gotten there: I hated it. I told Nicole that it had been the worst 24 hours of my lifetime, but she had me all figured out. It was then when I opened my mind, and since then, I have walked into every experience with the thought that it could be the most fun I’ve ever had.

Camp taught me to be optimistic.

It’s two summers later and I’m the one in the eccentric outfits, which I now know are a starred item on the camp packing list for dress up lunches and program days. However, it’d be entirely acceptable to wear a clown suit on any normal day just for kicks. It’s such a treasure to be in a place where quirkiness is embraced, a place where everyone is embraced. My hair is un-brushed, my face is bare and sun-kissed, I wear t-shirts that give off an ‘it came with that dirt stain’ vibe. At camp, the people are permissive. It was when I walked out of Cabin N my third summer at camp wearing suspenders made out of masking tape, sunglasses with the lenses poked out, a striped polo with the collar popped, and socks with Birkenstocks and was judged by not a single person.

Camp taught me the value of acceptance.

“Just remember on the way home that you were never meant to feel alone,” was a quote that hit me hard when my best friend, Merry, said it to me as we wept through our goodbyes at the end of our seventh summer at camp. We exchanged letters that we’d written for each other to open once we got home. Lying in my bed a few hours later, I was crying harder than I had been on that dreary January day, not because I had to go to camp, but because I had to leave behind such an extraordinary place filled with such remarkable human beings.

Camp taught me the value of friendship.

It was 3:56am on August 16th, 2014, and I was lying on the tennis courts with seven of my fellow CITS (counselors-in-training) in a circle with our heads in the middle. We gazed up at the sky, marveling over the New Hampshire stars, and I don’t think I’d ever seen a sight so beautiful. Throughout the past 27 days I’d been at camp, I had been the one with her camera always out. I got a nice new Nikon for Christmas the past year and was certainly putting it to good use. We didn’t so much pose for photos, but just captured moments. Right then though, as I lived one of the final hours of the most legendary night of my life, I didn’t want any artificial light ruining the illumination of the shooting stars above me. The CITs and I loved documenting our adventures that summer, but right then, I didn’t want to have a picture because sometimes a moment is so special that the only place worthy of it is in your head and your heart. It was then when I learned to cherish the laughter I thought would be endless because I knew a time would come when it was.

Camp taught me to live in the moment.

Flash forward eight years later from that dreary January day and I find myself crying tears of joy for my green letter saying I got in. After two summers of evaluations, training, and ultimately proving myself, I have been invited back to be a counselor in 2015, my ninth summer at camp. As I talked on the phone with my friend Maggie, a counselor in 2014 and a close friend whom I kinda consider to be my mentor, I told her about the conversation I had had earlier that day with my friend Allison. Allison is in the grade below me and had just received her green letter inviting her back to be a CIT in 2015.

It was so cool to me because Allison was asking me all these questions about what it was like to be a CIT, and just last year, that had been me asking Maggie about what it was like to be a CIT. That was when Maggie said to me, “That’s what’s so great about camp; You gotta pass it on.” Not only is “Pass It On” an iconic song in the camp song book, but I was beginning to understand the value of it. As I embark upon a new journey in 2015, I will see camp in a whole new light. Instead of being the camper that is being inspired by her counselors, I will be the counselor inspiring her campers. I get idyllic just thinking about it, finally having the opportunity to give to girls the experience that camp gave to me.

Camp taught me to give back, or rather, to pass it on.

After all the time that has passed, I can still remember that dreary January day from any other. I am enamored by the place I had once tried to avoid like the plague. As I observed camp out the suburban’s window on August 4th, 2007, I was entirely unaware that I had just found the most precious part of my life without even knowing I was looking for it.

Camp has taught me a thousand lessons and given me a thousand memories. Maybe one of the most unexplainable lessons I’ve learned though, is that no pattern of ink on paper can capture the feeling a place can give.

This was written by Anna D. in her A.P. English class. Anna will be returning to Camp as a JC.

Reflections from Alisson Borowski Kolodner – A few of our favorite things

Last summer, I had the pleasure of being the Middler Division Leader at Camp. This was my 16th summer, and the opportunity to spend an entire season back at Huckins with my four children (and my husband every weekend) was too amazing to pass up. With only 75 days left until the girls come pouring back through the white gates, we took tonight’s dinner to talk about a few of our favorite things. Tadhg (age 4): Archery! Kiernan (age 6): Swimming. Of any type. Oliver (age 8): Peter Pan and Harry Potter days. Merin (age 2): Owls. Loons. Mike (my husband): Sailing the Hobe. Tadhg: Tomatoes on the salad bar. Kiernan: Catching chickens when they escaped (he was Camp’s resident chicken catcher all summer). Oliver: Feeding the animals with Jody in the morning. Merin: Eggs. Chickens. Eggs! Mike: Playing tennis on the amazing new courts. Tadhg: Canoeing down Black Brook with Joe (the boys’ au pere). Kiernan: Kayaking to the Island. Oliver: Kayaking to the Island and back and then swimming (older brother always has to outdo the younger ones). Merin: My bracelet. Paige! Paige bracelet! (Paige was Merin’s au pere) Me–Borowski: The sounds of girls laughing, talking and singing all day long. The crazy loud moments when everyone is cheering for the same thing. And the absolutely perfect calm and quiet that occurs each morning right before Reveille blows–the moment that holds the promise of yet another amazing Nellie day. The summer of 2014 was the best one yet for my family, and probably for many of you. I can’t wait to share a few weeks with all of you back at our favorite place on earth. A place where you can swim, shoot archery as Harry Potter, collect chicken’s eggs, play tennis with a friend, make a bracelet and cheer and sing until your voice goes hoarse because that’s what Nellie girls (and staff kids) do each and every day. Huckins hearts to everyone— Love, Borowski

Borowski When not at Camp Huckins, Alisson and her family reside in Philadelphia, PA, where she is co-founder of Our Baby Class.

staff kidsOliver, Kiernan and Tadhg are the first three staff kids holding the rope.

Thought of the Day – Jessie Felber

For the last six months, I spent my life traveling around the world. I visited and lived in 6 states, 7 countries and on two different continents. Every place I visited was extremely different from the others; the people, food, language, culture, and even the way things looked were different. At times, this felt overwhelming. I craved some sort of consistency, and searched hard to find something in common between all these different places.

The one connection I was able to find was that people everywhere want to give and be loved.

The way people do this is different, but the idea of love is a dominating factor in each of us. No matter where I was in the world, and no matter how far away home was, love remained. There were people everywhere, though different from each other, to give love and be loved.

So here at Huckins, it is important and good to recognize that we are all different, and maybe there is not always much the same between us.

But what each of us has is the ability to love and a desire to be loved. So let’s use it well and love each other!

Have a Nellie day!

— Jessie Felber

Jessie Felber picThe summer of 2014, Jessie was a double SC in the Middler Division and she celebrated her double Huckster year too (10 years)! She is a sophomore at the University of New Hampshire studying Family Studies. Jessie spent last year traveling with Up with People which is a global education program made up of young people from all around the world that uses music and community service as a way to break down global barriers.  In six months she lived with 18 different host families, and visited Colorado, Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota, Ohio, 5 cities in Mexico, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, The Netherlands, and Italy.  Jessie is on the far left.

Happy new year!

It’s time to make your new year’s resolutions…here’s one:

REGISTER for the HUCKINS TRI-ATH-LOON!

Sunday, June 7, 2015 at Camp Huckins

Join us for this all-women’s sprint triathlon on the shores of Ossipee!

  • SWIM – 1/3 mile
  • BIKE – 10.5 miles
  • RUN – 3.1 miles

Support the Huckins Scholarship Fund!

http://www.huckinstriathlon.com

Swim with the loons, bike beneath the pines and run for the FUNd!

Huckins Hearts -Tri 2014Huckins hearts with our 2014 triathlon swimmers!

Register as an individual or a team.  Ages 15+.  Youth dash, ages 4-14.  Duathlon option.  Participants must raise funds for the Huckins Scholarship Fund.

To register and for more details: http://www.huckinstriathlon.com

 

Thought of the Day – Becca Fallon

“Out here, I’m finally taller than all of those giants I left in that place.”

Today is the last day of Camp. I pack my trunk, listening to the soft harmonies of Kate and Meredith. The real world, the world I ached for at my college graduation just two short months ago now towers over me, threatens to swallow me up. What happens when I drive out of the white gates tomorrow? Will I ever feel as strong, as important, as loved as I do in this haven between pines and lake?

Here, measured by the height of my soul (never better nurtured than by cool night breezes and Ossipee waters), I am tall. Out there, I am a cold 5’5” (on a good day). Among tall buildings and bustling strangers, I have not the intelligence of Hermione, the magic of Glinda or the spark of Tinkerbell. Will I survive in a distant city in a distant country?

Exhale. Of course I will.

I resolve to pack a box, contents:

  • One fairy wand (multipurpose)
  • One postcard from my co, complete with two buttons made in the Craft Shop (Queen Bey and Barack)
  • Two awards commemorating program successes
  • One strip of photographs with my housemates, taken at Big Change, featuring various strange hats
  • Immeasurable Gratitude, Immeasurable Love

You can always carry things with you. Some take up space in a suitcase, and some take up space in your heart. Thank you especially for the latter, Camp Huckins.

–Becca Fallon

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Becca was one of our Program Directors this past summer.  Over her past 11 years at Huckins, she has been a camper, counselor, and CIT trainer.  Becca graduated from Williams College where she received a BA in Anthropology and English.  Becca is currently working towards her Masters in Sociology of the Internet at Oxford University.  Her fairy wand has come in handy on many occasions in England.

Giving Tuesday!

TODAY is #GivingTuesday!

It is an international day of Giving Back and supporting places you care about!

Camp Huckins invites you to join us!

Make an impact.  Make a difference.  Make a gift.

campers3  Every gift to the Camp Huckins Annual Fund supports our mission — providing a fun and safe summer camp experience for girls.  Gifts support our programs, staff, facilities, scholarship, and endowment!sailboat1

BE NELLIE in the world today — and every day!

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Click: Make a gift today!
Call: 603-539-4710
Mail: 17 Camp Huckins Road, Freedom, NH 03836

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Tell your friends!

@CampHuckins  #HuckinsHearts  #CNHAlumni

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The Annual Fund ends on December 31st!  Check to see if your company has a matching gift program.

THANK YOU!

 

We Give Thanks

As Thanksgiving approaches, all of us here at Camp Huckins are grateful for our community.  We have terrific campers, amazing counselors and staff, supportive parents, engaged alumni, and many thoughtful friends!  We feel very blessed for all of the people who make Camp Huckins so special.

change day cabin pic counselors

We also honor the natural beauty of Camp on the shores of Lake Ossipee.  We appreciate that most of our time at Camp is spent outside in nature, “unplugged” from technology and instant communications.  The pace of life is slowed and simple pleasures outdoors are enjoyed.

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The Waterfront, Small Crafts Beach, Craft Shop, Sports Field, and everywhere in-between, are places to learn new skills, grow, and have fun.  Dining communally and singing at the top of our lungs are also some of our favorite things to do!  Camp activities are the best!

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swimming

At Candlelight, which brings each session to a close, we are thankful for the friends we have made.  We look forward to seeing our friends year after year for decades to come.

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In the spirit of Thanksgiving, we wish each of you a wonderful holiday.  Huckins Hearts from all of us at Camp Huckins to you.

Huckster Kara, Jody, Mark (2)

Alumni Reflections — Giving Back

Even though it’s been 20 years since I was a counselor in Cabin Q, Camp Huckins still plays an important role in my life. As an alumna, I want to do my part to ensure that Camp has the resources it needs and I was excited to learn that I can give to Camp through the annual United Way campaign.

Giving to Camp Huckins through United Way is easy. Once you determine how much you want to donate each pay period, you can designate that gift to a United Way agency – or agencies, if you’d like to split it between a couple of organizations. In my case, I split the donation between Camp (officially “Carroll County YMCA – Camp Huckins”), the YMCA of Greater Boston and my local United Way’s financial empowerment efforts. My employer, Bank of America, matches my donation, which means Camp receives even more support. Since the money is automatically taken out of my paycheck, the process is seamless.

Colleen and girls 2014Colleen with her daughters (and future Nellie girls!), Lucy (left) and Eliza (right).

I took my daughters Lucy and Eliza to our first Mother Daughter weekend this September. We had a blast staying in Cabin U, making s’mores with new friends and sneaking a golf cart ride with Jody. I loved the fact that Camp still felt very familiar, even though there had been some welcome changes like updated facilities. It takes a lot to maintain such a special place and I am glad to support it. Please join me, whether you make a gift to Camp through United Way, write a check directly to Camp or provide non-financial support. It all counts!

–Colleen Monahan Arons, 1986-1989, 1993

CAMP HUCKINS IS PARTICIPATING IN #GivingTuesday ON TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2nd. 

JOIN US!  @CampHuckins  #HuckinsHearts  #CNHAlumni  #GivingTuesday

giving tuesday logo2The Camp Huckins 2014 Annual Fund ends on December 31st.  To learn more about giving opportunities, please contact: Amily Dunlap Moore at amily@camphuckins.com or 603-539-4710.

Make an immediate impact!  http://www.camphuckins.com – click “Donate”

THANK YOU!!

Giving Tuesday – December 2nd!

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After Thanksgiving, there is BLACK FRIDAY, then SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAY, then CYBER MONDAY and since 2012 GIVING TUESDAY!

Camp Huckins will be participating in this year’s Giving Tuesday effort on Tuesday, December 2, 2014. Last year, over 10,000 organizations in 46 countries came together to celebrate giving and to kick-off the holiday giving season on #GivingTuesday.  We hope you will join us!

Click here: Make a gift to Camp Huckins!

After you make your gift, post a photo, tweet, and let your friends know!   @CampHuckins     #HuckinsHearts     #CNHAlumni        #GivingTuesday

Also, check with your employer about matching your gift! Many corporations have a matching gift program and many companies are joining the #GivingTuesday movement.

Gifts to Camp Huckins support our mission — providing a safe and fun summer camp experience for girls!  Through the generosity and leadership of our alumni, parents and friends, we are able to sustain and grow our excellent programs, facilities, and staff.  Annual fund gifts also support our scholarship and endowment funds.

THANK YOU FOR SUPPORTING CAMP HUCKINS!!!

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